Pubdate: Wed, 14 Jun 2006 Source: Brampton Guardian (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 Brampton Guardian Contact: http://www.thebramptonguardian.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1485 Author: Roger Belgrave Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?135 (Drug Education) STUDENTS URGED TO PRACTICE POSITIVE PEER PRESSURE Peers Mediate Some Conflicts Since peer pressure has such a significant influence on the actions of teenagers, other teens can play a powerful role in helping fellow students make safe choices about drugs and violence. Panelists participating in a St. Augustine Secondary School community forum on safety, violence and drug prevention said there is great value in peer mediation and intervention. The recent panel discussion was organized and presented by the school council. Parents, students and staff were invited to the community forum to hear a police officer, youth outreach worker, education consultant and mediator and students speak about safety, violence and drug prevention issues. The audience of about 25 also had an opportunity to ask the panelists questions. "We have failed to recognize that peer pressure is a dominant force," education consultant and mediator Claude Grimmond told those in attendance. Life for today's youth is much more difficult than it was for their parent's generation, he added. Schools and school boards have to find ways to support parents having difficulty with their children, according to Grimmond. Peer mediation may provide vital assistance, especially when many teenagers are more swayed by other teenagers than parental advice. "We need to make certain that we support peer intervention," Grimmond said. A peer program is not the panacea, but it is a powerful tool to address some of the problems parents and their children face, he concluded. Students Shakira Abubakar, Elizabeth Cooper and Eshan Sharma are volunteers with St. Augustine's peer mediation program Empower Student Partnership (ESP). The students speak to other students about racism, peer pressure and other issues that concern youth. "We basically just give students a chance to talk to fellow students," explained Abubakar. Peer mediators also undergo conflict resolution training. On occasion, they mediate disputes between students. Sharma pointed out mediators do not resolve the conflict, their job is to help the students involved in the argument find their own solution. "We give them a chance to actually talk about why they're fighting," Abubakar explained. Any lasting resolution must be created by the individuals at odds with each other. Peel Regional Police Const. Matt Pekeski told parents drugs are a prevalent reality in high schools across the region and experimentation is a youthful rite of passage. Parents must be on the lookout for drug paraphernalia and clothing with drug symbols or references. Perhaps most important, however, is to insist on meeting their children's friends. Whether it is drug use prevention or safety, parents must find time to engage children and involve themselves in their lives. "The No. 1 thing is: Know your kids," said Pekeski. "Speak to them. Know where they are at all times. Know who they are hanging out with." Parents might be surprised about how little they know about what children are up to outside the home environment, Grimmond remarked. It is important for parents to be less reactive and spend more time talking and listening to their children, he added. "We need to step back and look at how we work with kids. "As parents we need to become more proactive," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom